Abstract
To overcome the lack of the surface micrometeorological data needed for air quality modelling in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA), a long-term micrometeorological campaign was carried during the year 2001. Three surface stations were installed at sites found at NNW, NE, and S of the MCMA, each one equipped with a 3D ultrasonic anemometer and conventional meteorological sensors for temperature, relative humidity, pressure, global radiation, net radiation, and rainfall. One-hour averages were calculated for all measurements and for the estimates of the turbulence parameters such as friction velocity, scale temperature, Monin-Obukhov length, sensible heat flux and turbulent kinetic energy, among others. A simple micrometeorological database is available at an Internet site. In addition, some preliminary analyses of the turbulence data of one of the stations was done to estimate the surface roughness length and some similarity relations.